Dow v. Sunset Telephone & Telegraph Co.

106 P. 587, 157 Cal. 182, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 246
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1910
DocketS.F. No. 4854.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 106 P. 587 (Dow v. Sunset Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dow v. Sunset Telephone & Telegraph Co., 106 P. 587, 157 Cal. 182, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 246 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

Plaintiff was a “trouble shooter” in the employ of the defendant telephone company. His principal duty was to discover and repair minor difficulties attending the telephone service, defective telephones, fallen wires, weakness of batteries, and grounding of wires. Upon the day of the accident he had been sent to locate and remedy a trouble with the telephone belonging to the Pure Water Company. He had been told by his superior that the telephone of the Pure Water Company was “noisy,” and had asked in return if there was “anything hot on it.” He was told in reply that it seemed to be “a ground.” By “a ground” is meant the interruption of the current by the crossing of wires or the breaking and falling of a telephone wire to the earth, or against some surface that acts as a conductor of electricity, and interrupts its continued flow along its proper wire. By his question whether there was anything “hot” on the wire plaintiff’s meaning was *184 whether the telephone wires of the Pure Water Company had become surcharged from any cause with a dangerous quantity of electric fluid. Inasmuch as a telephone wire carries only about thirty volts, there is no danger attendant upon working amongst such wires under ordinary circumstances. But where a telephone wire comes in contact with a wire belonging to some other system using a high voltage, danger may result. Plaintiff inspected the telephone of the Pure Water Company, found it was working badly, examined the fuse-box and found that the fuses were in good condition. The fuses, are thin hair-like wires of low fusibility which immediately melt and prevent any excess current of electricity from being carried over the telephone wires and into the house. He thus-became satisfied that there was nothing “hot” on the wire, and proceeded down the street following the course of the wire, to see if he could locate a “ground.” He thus in his progress came to a test pole, that is to say, a pole with a double cross-arm, between which the wires could be scraped, testers applied, and the direction of the trouble located. He ascended this pole-to apply his tester to the Pure Water Company wires in order to ascertain whether the trouble lay between that point and the office of the Pure Water Company, or was further on. On ascending the pole he braced himself with one leg thrust over the cross-arm, and took out his pliers to prepare the Pure Water Company’s wires for the application of the tester. Bunning along this pole were numerous other telephone wires. Amongst, them were two running out San Pablo Avenue to Sixty-Third Street, and there crossing the street and passing over electric-light wires belonging to the defendant lighting company. These wires were the telephone wires of a schoolhouse-known as the Bay School. As Dow was working with his. pliers upon the Pure Water Company telephone wires, his. hand, or the instrument which it held, came in contact with the Bay School telephone wires, and Dow fell back unconscious, hanging in the air by the leg which he had thrust under the brace. For the injuries which he sustained by this electric shock he brought this action for the recovery of damages against the telephone company and the lighting company. It was made to appear that the defendant lighting company controlled a wire on Telegraph Avenue carrying a high and. dangerous voltage of electricity. The telephone company *185 had strung the telephone wires of the Bay School across the street and over the wire of the lighting company and in dangerous proximity thereto. Originally about six or eight inches separated them, but by the sagging of the telephone wires, when the wind blew or other disturbance caused the swaying of the telephone wires, they came into occasional contact with the light company’s wires and received from them electricity in quantities extremely dangerous to human life. This occasional contact or “bouncing” contact, as it is called, had been noted by employees of the light company, and some ten days before the accident one had reported it to his superior, the foreman, saying that “somebody would get an awful rap out of it sometime.” But the foreman replied, “To hell with it. It is up to the telephone company. Let them attend to it.” It appears that the trouble with the Pure Water Company telephone was caused by the fact that the Bay School telephone wires running near it were thus occasionally supercharged from the lighting company wire, and the Pure Water Company wires in turn by induction drew to themselves some of the electric current, thus causing the defective service through the telephone, or making it, as it was called, “noisy.” After the accident, the cause of it, the proximity and occasional touching of the Bay School telephone wires with the lighting wire, was remedied, and an inspection showed that the insulation of the light wires was old and chafed and that the voltage in them was transmitted to the Bay School telephone wires. Plaintiff charged that the Oakland Gas, Light & Heat Company negligently and carelessly allowed its insulation to become defective, and negligently and carelessly omitted to repair and renew it where it was crossed by the telephone wire; that the insulating material covering the lighting wires had become rotten, defective, and worn out, and in such condition that the current contained therein would escape into any wires which might come in contact therewith, and that this was well known to the defendants and unknown to plaintiff. Trial was had before a jury and verdict and judgment for plaintiff followed, from which latter and from the order of the court denying its motion for a new trial, the Gas, Light & Heat Company appeals.

Appellant first contends that the evidence fails to show any negligence upon its part. Herein it refers to the testimony *186 that the insulation was that usually employed by companies engaged in the same service, and that, notwithstanding the number of years for which this wire with its insulation had been in use, it was still good and sufficient insulation. It is further urged in this connection that as the rottenness of the insulation is the only charge of negligence against the telephone company, there may not be considered upon this appeal the argued negligence charged to both companies of allowing their wires to remain in too close proximity. But in this appellant is in error. The complaint not only charges the rottenness •of the insulation, but it further charges that the telephone wires came in contact with the electric-light wires by reason of natural sagging “and in consequence of having been suspended too •closely above said electric-light wire.” Much evidence of the existing conditions was freely admitted. It was shown that there was a “jumping are” of light caused by the contact or •close proximity of the two wires, and that this was known to ■employees of the lighting company and reported to their foreman who had charge of that department, and that an inspection of the lighting company’s wire after the accident showed an abrasion or fusing or a rottenness at the place of contact which unquestionably allowed the electricity in dangerous •quantities to escape to the telephone wire. But even treating the case as one where the consideration of the negligence must be strictly limited to the defectiveness of the insulation, sufficient was shown to warrant the presentation of the question of appellant’s negligence to the jury. Under the evidence •offered by plaintiff it was established that there was dangerous proximity between the wires of the two companies and occasional contact between them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 P. 587, 157 Cal. 182, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dow-v-sunset-telephone-telegraph-co-cal-1910.